The 2017 MLB Attendance Numbers

December 26, 2017

HOLD ON …..

 

………. IT’S COMING!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The 2017 MLB Attendance Numbers *

* From the Post-Publication Comment Section: “Those are not attendance figures. MLB doesn’t reveal attendance figures. Those are ticket sales. Attendance would likely be somewhat less.” – Cliff Blau.

After being called into question in the comment section by one of baseball’s staunchest seekers and defenders of the truth, Cliff Blau, we have no problem with the logical conclusion he reaches. Indeed, if these were – or are – seats based on ticket sales alone, they would not be attendance figures, and we should expect actual attendance to be variably less than the actual number of tickets sold.

However, these figures were not described as “ticket sales” by ESPN in their report. ESPN columns them as “attendance” figures – not ticket sales.

If that is what they are, simply purchased seats, then quoting sources like ESPN need to make that point clear to those of us who grew up understanding attendance as the total number of people who actually attended a game on a purchased ticket.

We have no argument with the logical conclusion of Mr. Blau. If they are tickets sales, the actual  attendance figures should be lower.

Here’s the link to our source article. Pay attention to the language of the report. It seems pretty clear to us that they intended their efforts to be read as an attendance report – and not as a ticket sales memo to the marketing and business staffs of each club.

Forgive us too. We inadvertently neglected to include this important referential link at publication time:

http://www.espn.com/mlb/attendance

 

TABLE 1

MLB TEAM HOME ATTENDANCE DURING THE 2017 SEASON

RANKING BASED UPON AVERAGE HOME GAME ATTENDANCE

# TEAM LEAGUE GAMES ATTENDANCE AVERAGE
1 Los Angeles Dodgers NL 81 3,765,856 46,492
2 St. Louis Cardinals NL 81 3,447,937 42,567
3 San Francisco Giants NL 81 3,303,652 40,785
4 New York Yankees AL 79 3,146,966 39,835
5 Toronto Blue Jays AL 81 3,203,886 39,544
6 Chicago Cubs NL 81 3,199,562 39,500
7 Los Angeles Angels AL 81 3,019,583 37,278
8 Colorado Rockies NL 81 2,953,650 36,464
9 Boston Red Sox AL 81 2,917,678 36,020
10 Milwaukee Brewers NL 81 2,558,722 31,589
11 Washington Nationals NL 81 2,524,980 31,172
12 Texas Rangers AL 81 2,507,760 30,960
13 Atlanta Braves NL 81 5,505,252 30,929
14 New York Mets NL 80 2,460,622 30,757
15 Houston Astros AL 81 2,403,671 29,674
16 Detroit Tigers AL 81 2,321,599 28,661
17 Kansas City Royals AL 80 2,220,370 27,754
18 San Diego Padres NL 81 2,138,491 26,401
19 Seattle Mariners AL 81 2,135,445 26,363
20 Arizona Diamondbacks NL 81 2,134,375 26,350
21 Minnesota Twins AL 80 2,051,279 25,640
22 Cleveland Indians AL 81 2,048,138 25,285
23 Baltimore Orioles AL 81 2,028,424 25,042
24 Philadelphia Phillies NL 79 1,905,354 24,118
25 Pittsburgh Pirates NL 81 1,919,447 23,696
26 Cincinnati Reds NL 81 1,836,917 22,677
27 Chicago White Sox AL 79 1,629,470 20,626
28 Miami Marlins NL 81 1,651,997 20,395
29 Oakland Athletics AL 80 1,475,721 18,446
30 Tampa Bay Rays AL 80 1,253,619 15,670

 

TABLE 1 COMMENTARY

So how do we explain the presence of St. Louis and San Francisco in the #’s 2 and 3 spots behind mighty Los Angeles in the race for biggest MLB gate in 2017? St. Louis had an estimated 2016 population of 311,404 for the 2 spot and San Francisco had a 2016 “e-p0p” of 870,887 for the 3 hole. And, of course, the 2016 “e-p0p” for the most attended ball games in LA was 3,792,322 and the Dodger fans were turning out to watch a club that took the Houston Astros down to Game 7 in The World Series before finally yielding – while this was pretty much of an off-year for the Cardinals and Giants.

Go figure. And most of you know the drill.

St. Louis is, without serious challenge, the best fan supported MLB club out there. The Cardinals have a huge commuter fan base beyond the city limits that supports them and a dedicated southern and midwestern fan base that travels often and apparently well to the place we used to call The Mound City – and just to see the Cardinal games.

Support for the Giants in San Francisco has been buoyed in recent years by the three World Series the team won in 2010, 2012, and 2014. Perhaps, the fans were hoping that even-year “miss” in 2016 would be made up for them in 2017. All we know for sure in the Bay area example is that the “go-see-em” glanditis is not contagious to the fans across the bay in Oakland.

 

TABLE 2

RANK ORDER FINISH OF THE 7 TEAMS FROM THE 4 LARGEST CITIES

HERE/GATE
CITY SIZE TEAM LEAGUE GAMES AVERAGE
1/1 2 DODGERS NL 81 46,492
2/4 1 YANKEES AL 79 39,835
3/6 3 CUBS NL 81 39,500
4/7 2 ANGELS AL 81 37,278
5/14 1 METS NL 80 30,757
6/15 4 ASTROS AL 81 29,674
7/27 3 WHITE SOX AL 79 20,626

 

TABLE 2 COMMENTARY

The Yankees from big old New York fought hard in 2017, also taking the Astros to 7 games before losing the AL pennant to Houston. The Astros fulfilled the spot of mathematical medicocrity in attendance finishing 1th in a total field of 30 and spared only by the “never-do-well” White Sox from having the worst attendance for any of the 7 clubs from the Big Four most populated cities.

Enjoy viewing all the data with your own eyes and seeing what the rest of us are missing.

And Keep Those Happy Holidays Going on the Way to Our Latest Happy New Year!

 

********************

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

A Brand New Baseball Christmas Tale

December 24, 2017

This paperweight size beautifully detailed copy of the Houston Astros’ 2017 World Series Championship Trophy arrived at our house about 2:00 PM Saturday, December 23, 2017. The sender was anonymous, but we are grateful nonetheless.

 

The Day Before the Night Before Christmas

An Even Now As Yet Unfolding True Story

By The Pecan Park Eagle

Twas the Day Before
The Night Before Christmas
When all through this
Ancient Creaking House

Not a creature was racing or stirring
Not even My Sweetheart, My Spouse

Our stockings both hung
By the Chimney with Cheer
In hopes that St. Nicholas
Soon enough would Be Here

But Nick wasn’t due for a couple of days

So Ma and I retired to our nap-taking ways

All safe in our bed
While visions of sugarplums
Danced in our heads

And mom in her kerchief
And I in my Series Cap,
Had just settled down
For a Saturday nap

When out on the porch
There arose such a clatter
I sprang from my bed
To check on the matter

Away to the front door
I flew like a flash
I tore back the lock – Threw open the door

In time to see FedEx – Going elsewhere to score
And then I looked down – At the box left below

It carried my name – But from whom did not show

I simply could not forestall – in seasonal bliss

Waiting two more days – knowing not whom to kiss

 

The content information in the box identifed the gift as a 2017 World Series Trophy Paperweight. There was no disclosure information on the name of anyone who may have arranged this shipment.

 

So I opened her up – hoping the secret lay there

But it didn’t show up? – Life happens

 

The Trophy Face
**********
“All right, Mr. DeMille, I’m ready for my close-up.” ~ Norma Desmond
**********
Classic line from the iconic 1950 movie, “Sunset Blvd”

 

The gift itself is the giver-identity giveaway

It’s about a 4” tall replica of the 2017 World Series Trophy

Which means the thoughtful giver is either one of my kind

Or one of the baseball gods who made it all happen for us

 

If this wonderful giver is one of my baseball brothers or sisters

It won’t ruin anything for me to know it was you who did it.

Working through the Astros, the Baseball Gods did it on 11/01/17

And who knows, maybe one of the gods alone called Amazon directly

 

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays, Astros Fans

We’ve got much to celebrate forever now

And thank you so much too, “baseball god”

Whomever you may be – like the 2017 Houston Astros

You are always in my heart

********************

 

 

 

********************

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

 

Some Lost Balls of Baseball History

December 23, 2017

Every baseball put to full use itself also is ready to reveal a larger world to the user.

Christmas always does this to me. I simply don’t write about it every Christmas. This year I will.

It’s my list of the lost significant baseballs in history that could have been retrieved, saved, and collected, but were not.

Why they weren’t collected is easy enough to explain. During most of the early 20th century, baseballs were little more than game equipment. The umpire would roll one out to start a game and it would stay in play pretty much as long as it was find-able,  no matter how brown, grass-stained, or scuffed its cover became from contact with bats, walls, the ground, and various tools the pitchers may have used to make it float to the plate funny.

As for foul balls, some clubs even used staff to pursue the return of foul balls in the name of economy. The rest fell into the hands of fans, along with the few home runs that left the parks in flight early on – and many of the latter group were street kids who continued to play with them until their covers disappeared.

As a result, some famous balls in baseball history, as we only recently have proclaimed them to be, are now lost to wonderment over their current whereabouts, indeed, if they even have any such survival as material entities.

The Merkle Boner Play ball is a shining example. When Fred Merkle of the Giants failed to complete his run from 1st to 2nd on a hit up the middle that appeared to have won the game for his club over the Cubs, just to save time getting off the field, Evers of the Cubs called for the bal so he could make a force play on Merkle and negate the fatal play. Evers succeeded, but there was a level of doubt as to whether the ball used was actually the true game ball. Some Giants said that they saw on of the Cubs throwing the true ball into the stands – where a fan supposedly grabbed it and ran away. As you probably know, the Cubs won the argument and the replay game that gave them the 1908 pennant, the World Series, and possibly a curse against the Cubs winning again for another 108 years. I’ve always just wondered about the fan who may have gotten the real ball. If he did, what did he do with it? Did he give it to his kid for street ball destruction? Did he throw it in the garbage? Or is it sitting in a nest of cobwebs and dust on an attic shelf in someone’s ancient NYC domicile to this very day. If it is, we’ll never know. The thing can’t speak for itself without help.

At any rate, here’s my list. I would exprect you list, longer or shorter, would include some of these, but be different from my picks:

PECAN PARK EAGLE LIST OF LOST SIGNIFICANT BASEBALLS

1) (1903) FIRST PITCH OF THE VERY FIRST WORLD SERIES

2) (1908) FRED MERKLE BONER PLAY GAME

3) (1927) BABE RUTH’S 60TH HOME RUN

4) (1932) BABE RUTH’S CALLED SHOT IN THE WORLD SERIES

5) (1938) LAST PITCH IN EACH OF JOHNNY VANDER MEER’S BACK-TO-BACK NO HITTERS.

6) (1951) BOBBY THOMSON’S SHOT HEARD ROUND THE WORLD

7) (1956) LAST PITCH IN DON LARSEN’S PERFECT WORLD SERIES GAME WIN

8) (1960) BILL MAZEROSKI’S WALK-OFF HR BALL IN WORLD SERIES GAME 7

9) (1962) BOBBY SHANTZ’S FIRST PITCH FOR HOUSTON AS AN MLB CLUB

10) (1965) MICKEY MANTLE’S FIRST HR IN ASTRODOME

11) (2005) FO-9 TO JASON LANE THAT CLINCHED HOUSTON’S FIRST PENNANT

12) (2007) CRAIG BIGGIO’S HIT # 3,000

13) (2017) MARWIN GONZALEZ’S HR IN GAME 2 OF WORLD SERIES

14) (2017) ALEX BREGMAN’S WALK-OFF SINGLE IN GAME 5 OF WORLD SERIES

15) (2017) GEORGE SPRINGER’S HR IN GAME 7 OF WORLD SERIES

16) (2017) ALTUVE-TO-GURRIEL 4-3 PLAY THAT CLINCHED ASTROS 1ST WS WIN

 

WHAT HAPPENED TO THESE ITEMS?

Although much more may be known separately about each, we have nothing concrete to present you here today. We have read reports about the 1908 Merkle ball being thrown into the Polo Grounds stands and carried away by an assumed fan, but we’ve never run across any leads that connect from there. – Even if there had been, the lowly baseball wasn’t valued as a collector’s item in those early days. It was an item of utility. If it made it out of the ballpark at all that zany day in New York, it probably lived out the rest of its brief life collecting scuff marks from the sidewalks thereof.

I did read an article a few years back that the Mazeroski ball ended up in the hands of a Pittsburgh kid, the piece said – and with the results being exactly what you suspect. It was used up to the nub as a useful play ball – and then reported to the Pirates, I think. If the Pirates got it, I have no idea of what they might have done with a thing that looked like any other old kid’s game nubber.

Perhaps the Hall of Fame or some arcane SABR researcher will know what happened to the monumental HR and pitcher record balls. And, we also suspect that our wonderful Mr. Mike Acosta, the Authentications expert for the Houston Astros may even exactly know what happened to all those balls associated with the club’s 21st century achievement.

I see little hope that we shall ever see the first pitched ball from the first 1903 Modern Era World Series. People didn’t waste a perfectly good-to-go game ball for the laughable sake of history back in those early times.

********************

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

 

********************

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Bill Gilbert: Triple Milestones – 2017

December 23, 2017

Triple Milestones – 2017

By Bill Gilbert

       Offensive production in the major leagues increased again in 2017 due to another spike in the home run rate. Other offensive measures were also at the highest level in several years.

TRIPLE MILESTONE PRODUCTION: 1990-2017

YEAR R/G HR/G AVG OBA SLG OPS TMH*
1990 8.51 1.58 .258 .324 .386 .710 2
1991 8.62 1.61 .255 .323 .384 .707 3
1992 8.23 1.44 .256 .322 .377 .699 2
1993 9.20 1.78 .266 .332 .404 .736 5
1994 9.85 2.07 .270 .339 .424 .763 3
1995 9.69 2.02 .267 .338 .417 .755 8
1996 10.07 2.19 2.70 .340 .427 .767 21
1997 9.53 2.05 .267 .337 .419 .756 7
1998 9.58 2.08 .266 .335 .420 .755 14
1999 10.17 2.28 .271 .345 .434 .779 19
2000 10.28 2.34 .271 .345 .437 .782 26
2001 9.55 2.25 .264 .332 .427 .759 21
2002 9.24 2.09 .261 .331 .417 .748 12
2003 9.46 2.14 .264 .332 .422 .754 8
2004 9.63 2.25 .266 .335 .428 .763 12
2005 9.18 2.06 .265 .330 .419 .749 10
2006 9.72 2.22 .269 .336 .432 .768 13
2007 9.59 2.04 .268 .336 .423 .759 8
2008 9.30 2.01 .264 .333 .417 .750 7
2009 9.23 2.02 .262 .333 .418 .751 6
2010 8.77 1.90 .257 .325 .403 .728 6
2011 8.57 1.87 .255 .321 .399 .720 7
2012 8.64 2.03 .255 .319 .405 .724 4
2013 8.33 1.92 .253 .318 .396 .714 3
2014 8.13 1.73 .251 .314 .386 .700 2
2015 8.50 2.02 .254 .317 .405 .721 1
2016 8.96 2.23 .255 .322 .417 .739 4
2017 9.30 2.51 .255 .314 .426 .750 7

TMH* = Triple Milestones Hitters

Despite the increase in home runs, only five players hit 40 or more compared to eight in 2016 and nine in 2015. The big increase in the last two years has come in players that hit 30 or more home runs. This level was reached by 33 players in 2017, 38 in 2016 but only 11 in 2015.

      A useful indicator for tracking offense is the number of players who hit for both power and average by achieving the old-school milestones of a .300 batting average, 30 home runs and 100 runs batted in. A record 26 players reached all three Triple Crown category milestones in 2000, but that figure has dropped significantly in recent years. Only one player achieved all three in 2015. This figure increased to 4 in 2016 and 7 in 2017, the highest number since 2011, reflecting the increase in offense. Of the 33 players with 30+ home runs, only eight batted over .300. Maintaining a .300 batting average is the most difficult of the three milestones to reach.

            The only player that made the .300-30-100 club in 2015, Paul Goldschmidt of Arizona, fell short in 2016 and 2017. The four players who made it in 2016, all in the American League, failed to repeat in 2017.

PLAYER TIMES 2016 2017
MIGUEL CABRERA 8 .316-38-108 .248-16-60
DAVID ORTIZ 5 .315-38-127 Retired
ADRIAN BELTRE 3 .300-32-104 .312-17-71
MOOKIE BETTS 1 .318-31-113 .264-24-102
JOEY VOTTO 2   .320-36-100
JOSE ABREU 2   .304-33-102
CHARLIE BLACKMON 1   .331-37-104
MARCELL OZUNA 1   .312-37-124
NOLAN ARENADO 1   .309-37-130
JD MARTINEZ 1   .303-45-104
RYAN ZIMMERMAN 1   .303-36-108

 

GILBERT COMMENTS ON ABOVE 11 PLAYERS:

 CABRERA: “Worst year by far”

ORTIZ: “Went out on top in 2016”

BELTRE: “Slowed by injuries”

BETTS: “Failed to reach 2016 heights”

 

VOTTO: “Barely made it”

ABREU: “ Made it in 2004 rookie year”

BLACKMON: “Breakout year”

OZUNA: “Emerging star”

ARENADO: “first year hitting .300”

MARTINEZ: “Released by Astros in 2014”

ZIMMERMAN: “Big comeback year”

 

TWO PLAYERS CAME CLOSE IN 2017: 

PLAYER TIMES 2017 COMMENTS
PAUL GOLDSCHMIDT 2 .297-36-120 “Late slump hurt BA”
JONATHAN SCHOOP 0 .293-32-105 “Orioles’ best in 2017

Deck the Park with Analytics

December 22, 2017

Deck the Park with Analytics

~ A Pecan Park Eagle Translation

Deck the park with boughs of holly

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la
‘Tis our season to be jolly
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Don we now our gay apparel

Fa-la-la, la-la-la, la-la-la.
Troll the ancient Yule-tide carol
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la.

See the blazing year before us.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la
Strike the harp and join the chorus.
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Jeff Luhnow’s in merry measure.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la
As he builds ‘Stros’ Yule-tide treasure.
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Fast away the old year passes.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la
Hail the New Year, lads and lasses
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Sing with Hinch, joyous together.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la
Safe inside from wind and weather
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la

Deck the Park with Analytics.

Fa-la-la-la-la, the stats aren’t blah

 

********************

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

An Homage to Judy Dierker and Love

December 20, 2017

JULIA “JUDY” DIERKER passed away last Friday, December 15, 2017, after a lengthy illness. Her obituary is available on the page connected to this link:

http://www.kleinfh.com/m/?p=memorial&id=2049780

Our hearts go out to the heart of Larry Dierker and the hearts of all family members and close friends for what we know from our personal experience with the death of a truly loved one. It is the pain of all pains. One beyond estimation.

What we don’t know at first, but which always follows over time, is that true love never leaves. It stays. And it continues to give in ways we may never know it would – and it will do so – through the completion of our own human time on this earth.

Some of us believe that’s true because “God is Love,” and so, wherever God goes, Love goes too. And, like God, because Love is God, Love never leaves – wherever it goes. It stays. And it is far more powerful than any sense of loss or hurt that lands – also in our hearts.

In the end, only love prevails.

God Bless You All, Larry Dierker, Family, and Friends – because you already are so blessed to have had Judy in your lives for all this time.

People like Judy Dierker are in our lives to teach us life’s most beautiful and powerful lesson: If we want more love, we have to become willing to pass true love on to others by giving it away – in ways large and small.

From the little we family outsiders here could know, it appears likely that Judy Dierker had to have been one of the people who already understood that “if you want to keep the full glow of love burning brightest, you have to be willing to continue giving it away to the world.”

Judy may now be gone in physical form, but the gifts of love that passed through her to others in her lifetime shall live on as the active unstoppable energy of her caring – and as much like a force of nature that flows forever in our wildest imaginings – as constantly and as steadily – as the Great Falls of Niagara or the ever-roaring roll of the Mighty Mississippi, on its long southern journey to the sea.

Judy’s energies will stay in motion forever, even in her absence. The good she did shall also keep hurdling over cliffs and rolling a thousand miles to the ocean of love’s home of effort. It is unstoppable.

Rest in Peace, Judy Dierker. And may God continue to bless all our lives with the Love that is the essence that rests in the heartbeat of every breath we draw into our bodies – separately and together – in the good company of the love that steers us to embrace love for what it truly is.

God Rest Ye, Merry Gentle Men and Women! ~ Let Nothing You Dismay!

~ The Pecan Park Eagle

 

********************

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Bill Gilbert: Triple Milestone Hitting, 1990-2017

December 19, 2017

********************                                                                                    SEASONS GREETINGS. It’s time for Bill Gilbert’s annual look at the Triple Milestone Hitting production in MLB. – Have fun, baseball fans!

 

 

Triple Milestones – 2017

 By Bill Gilbert

 

      Offensive production in the major leagues increased again in 2017 due to another spike in the home run rate. Other offensive measures were also at the highest level in several years.

YEAR R/G HR/G AVG OBA SLG OPS TMH*
1990 8.51 1.58 .258 .324 .386 .710 2
1991 8.62 1.61 .255 .323 .384 .707 3
1992 8.23 1.44 .256 .322 .377 .699 2
1993 9.20 1.78 .266 .332 .404 .736 5
1994 9.85 2.07 .270 .339 .424 .763 3
1995 9.69 2.02 .267 .338 .417 .755 8
1996 10.07 2.19 2.70 .340 .427 .767 21
1997 9.53 2.05 .267 .337 .419 .756 7
1998 9.58 2.08 .266 .335 .420 .755 14
1999 10.17 2.28 .271 .345 .434 .779 19
2000 10.28 2.34 .271 .345 .437 .782 26
2001 9.55 2.25 .264 .332 .427 .759 21
2002 9.24 2.09 .261 .331 .417 .748 12
2003 9.46 2.14 .264 .332 .422 .754 8
2004 9.63 2.25 .266 .335 .428 .763 12
2005 9.18 2.06 .265 .330 .419 .749 10
2006 9.72 2.22 .269 .336 .432 .768 13
2007 9.59 2.04 .268 .336 .423 .759 8
2008 9.30 2.01 .264 .333 .417 .750 7
2009 9.23 2.02 .262 .333 .418 .751 6
2010 8.77 1.90 .257 .325 .403 .728 6
2011 8.57 1.87 .255 .321 .399 .720 7
2012 8.64 2.03 .255 .319 .405 .724 4
2013 8.33 1.92 .253 .318 .396 .714 3
2014 8.13 1.73 .251 .314 .386 .700 2
2015 8.50 2.02 .254 .317 .405 .721 1
2016 8.96 2.23 .255 .322 .417 .739 4
2017 9.30 2.51 .255 .314 .426 .750 7

TMH* = Triple Milestones Hitters

 

      Despite the increase in home runs, only five players hit 40 or more compared to eight in 2016 and nine in 2015. The big increase in the last two years has come in players that hit 30 or more home runs. This level was reached by 33 players in 2017, 38 in 2016 but only 11 in 2015.

       A useful indicator for tracking offense is the number of players who hit for both power and average by achieving the old-school milestones of a .300 batting average, 30 home runs and 100 runs batted in. A record 26 players reached all three Triple Crown category milestones in 2000, but that figure has dropped significantly in recent years. Only one player achieved all three in 2015. This figure increased to 4 in 2016 and 7 in 2017, the highest number since 2011, reflecting the increase in offense. Of the 33 players with 30+ home runs, only eight batted over .300. Maintaining a .300 batting average is the most difficult of the three milestones to reach.

            The only player that made the .300-30-100 club in 2015, Paul Goldschmidt of Arizona, fell short in 2016 and 2017. The four players who made it in 2016, all in the American League, failed to repeat in 2017.  

PLAYER TIMES 2016 2017
MIGUEL CABRERA 8 .316-38-108 .248-16-60
DAVID ORTIZ 5 .315-38-127 Retired
ADRIAN BELTRE 3 .300-32-104 .312-17-71
MOOKIE BETTS 1 .318-31-113 .264-24-102
JOEY VOTTO 2   .320-36-100
JOSE ABREU 2   .304-33-102
CHARLIE BLACKMON 1   .331-37-104
MARCELL OZUNA 1   .312-37-124
NOLAN ARENADO 1   .309-37-130
JD MARTINEZ 1   .303-45-104
RYAN ZIMMERMAN 1   .303-36-108

 GILBERT COMMENTS ON ABOVE 11 PLAYERS:

 CABRERA: “Worst year by far”

ORTIZ: “Went out on top in 2016”

BELTRE: “Slowed by injuries”

BETTS: “Failed to reach 2016 heights”

 

VOTTO: “Barely made it”

ABREU: “ Made it in 2004 rookie year”

BLACKMON: “Breakout year”

OZUNA: “Emerging star”

ARENADO: “first year hitting .300”

MARTINEZ: “Released by Astros in 2014”

ZIMMERMAN: “Big comeback year”

 

TWO PLAYERS CAME CLOSE IN 2017: 

PLAYER TIMES 2017 COMMENTS
PAUL GOLDSCHMIDT 2 .297-36-120 “Late slump hurt BA”
JONATHAN SCHOOP 0 .293-32-105 “Orioles’ best in 2017”

      The following list contains the names of players, active in 2017, who have had multiple .300-30-100 seasons in the past but have not done it in the last three years. Many have been limited by injuries. Some are still productive players but not at the same level as in their peak years. Since this list was started in 2004, David Ortiz and Adrian Beltre are the only players that have come back with another triple milestone season.

PLAYER TIMES LAST TIME 2017
ALBERT PUJOLS 10 2010 .241-23-101
RYAN BRAUN 3 2012 .268-17-52
MATT HOLLIDAY 2 2007 .231-19-64
DAVID WRIGHT 2 2008 ON DL ALL YEAR

GILBERT COMMENTS ON THE ABOVE 4 PLAYERS:

PUJOLS: “Seven straight years under .300”

BRAUN: Appears to be declining”

HOLLIDAY: “Former star now an average player”

WRIGHT: “Spent season o disabled list”

      Twenty nine of the thirty major league teams have had at least one triple milestone hitter since the year 2001. Kansas City has not had a triple milestone hitter since Jermaine Dye in 2000.

        Only one minor league player reced a triple milestone season in 2017.  

PLAYER CLUB MLB ORG 2017
CHRISTIAN WALKER RENO/AAA ARIZONA .309-32-114
  ARIZONA/NL ARIZONA .250-2-2
TOTAL FOR 2017 >     .308-34-116

       No college players achieved triple milestones in 2017.                                        

      Pitchers also strive for triple milestones – 20 wins, 200 strikeouts and an ERA under 3.00. No pitchers won 20 games in 2017. Two pitchers came close with 18 wins, 200 strikeouts and an ERA under 3.00.

 TWO CLOSE CALLS IN 2017 FOR PITCHING TRIPLE MILESTONES

PITCHERS WINS-SO-ERA COMMENTS
COREY KLUBER 18-265-2.25 “AL CY Young Award Winner”
CLAYTON KERSHAW 18-202-2.31 ‘Missed time with an injury”

Bill Gilbert

12/17/17

 

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

Early View of 2018 Astros Pitching Roster

December 17, 2017

Astros Signed Joe Smith for 2018
Smith last pitched for the Indians.

Then the Astros signed Hector Rondon for 2018
Rondon was big for the Cubs in their 2016 World Series Win.

 

AN EARLY LOOK AT THE 2018 ASTROS PITCHING ROSTER

5 STARTERS W L PCT. ERA G GS SV IP H BB SO
Justin Verlander 17 10 .623 3.46 34 34 0 225 198 68 213
Dallas Keuchel 14 12 .552 3.65 35 33 0 218 207 63 175
Lance McCullers 11 9 .543 3.60 22 22 0 191 176 40 132
Charlie Morton 11 14 .435 4.41 34 34 0 190 196 71 145
Collin McHugh 14 11 .571 4.08 35 33 0 195 198 54 177
8 RELIEVERS
Joseph Smith 4 3 .611 2.97 68 0 3 61 51 21 53
Hector Rondon 4 3 .581 3.22 61 0 18 68 58 20 69
Will Harris 3 3 .500 2.99 68 0 4 66 55 17 69
Ken Giles 3 3 .500 2.43 68 0 18 68 52 23 93
Brad Peacock 10 8 .558 4.05 40 28 0 167 147 79 166
Joe Musgrove 11 12 .478 4.52 49 25 2 171 176 44 153
James Hoyt 2 1 .667 4.42 68 0 0 75 70 23 94
Chris Devenski 7 5 .571 2.38 65 3 3 112 76 27 121

Important Data Display Explanation

The data contained in the above charts was prepared by Baseball Reference.com. It depicts the winning percentage (PCT.) and earned run average (ERA) numbers for each player’s entire careers. The other data is an averaging estimate of how each player has performed for each of however many 162 game schedules that can be fitted into his actual playing time data for the variables noted.

Example: Joseph Smith

  • Smith has won 44 games over 11 seasons. That averages out perfectly to the figure “4” shown in Smith’s “W” column.
  • Smith has lost 28 games over 11 seasons too. That works out to 2.545 losses, a figure that Baseball-Reference rounds up to the 3 losses that are shone here in the average Season “L” line.

B-R didn’t explain that methodology so I thought I’d give it a try. Otherwise, you may look at the fact that both Joe Smith and Hector Rondon had identical 4-3 W-L marks, but had wildly different win PCT. Numbers for their average year’s work. And now you should know why. It was because B-R gave the actual win % and ERA numbers for each players total career here.

Some Player Notes

We are a long way from knowing the final composition of this staff going to into the 2018 season, but this much is easy to know. It looks a whole better and brighter today than it did this time last year.

The “gooder” you are, the better you have a chance to become “gooder than all get out down the line!”

The Astros picked up Anthony Gose this past week as an unprotected roster claim. Gose has no prior big league time as a pitcher and a transforming former outfielder. If he’s way ahead of the curve, he could replace Tony Sipp, giving the Astros two lefties out of the pen. Otherwise, he goes back to the Texas Rangers as a “never mind” return of the merchandise.

David Paulino, Frances Martes, and Michael Feliz also could work their ways into the bullpen. We are a long way from knowing the composition of this staff going into the 2018 season. The business of assessment and the always unfolding window on new opportunity is in high gear.

It’s also going to take a while to see how much recovery we can count on from the talented Ken Giles. It’s going to take time, of course, but it may take a return to the circumstance that raised the question before the boogy man gets driven away. It may take another critical circumstance in the 2018 World Series to see if brave young Ken is ready to face whatever shows up in the PTSD corners of his closer mind at the very moment he needs to be ice water cool. It’s easy for the rest of us to say it’s just part of being human, but most of us don’t have to perform on a stage as big and as public as our Astros face every day they go to work.

How would you feel if you knew that the Houston Chronicle and the whole GD Internet was going to show up to write and report on your next bad day at the office?

Closing Thoughts on The Mining of Baseball Goodness.

The Smith and Rondon signings are proof enough. Nobody likes a smart ass, but everybody loves a champion. Our GM guy Jeff Luhnow is pretty darn good at recognizing the good ones that come along too – and now – since we won the 2017 World Series – they are coming to him with a desire to be a part of this rise from the labyrinth of disappointment that had enveloped our hope and ambition in Houston for far too long.

Now we must build on what’s finally airborne.

The Houston Astros are now the Champions. And there are some other good players out there too who also want to be part of that same improving club in 2018. We know the Astros know this fact too because the ever relentless Luhnow Analytic crew just landed two of them as boosts to the 2018 Astros relief staff roster.

Interesting too. Even though Joe Smith and Hector Rondon are different guys, if you go over their individual career stats side-by-side, you may end up thinking, as did we, that “hey, these two pitchers appear to be the same guy!”

It’s obvious that GM Luhnow clearly has a data-based formula that is major to his pursuit of whomever may be available, but what GM doesn’t possess some kind of driving impetus?

Also obvious: The 2018 season  is here. Even if we are still six weeks away from the start of spring training.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Trammell and Morris to Hall of Fame in 2018

December 16, 2017

Left: Alan Trammell
Right: Jack Morris
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Hall of Fame ~ 2018

Click the following link for the full induction story:

Jack Morris, Alan Trammell elected to Hall of Fame by Modern Era Committee

Our Pecan Park Eagle Commentary

Great news in our eyes. And good for the Modern Era Committee for retrieving two deserving former Tigers who slipped through gaping holes in the Baseball Writers net some time ago. Not sure what the circumstances were in each case that made this oversight possible, but it does show how baseball always will need a down-the-road-of-time plan for reviewing the oversight or unfair handling of candidates who performed well enough, but somehow got marginalized and blocked from entry by other factors, on and off the field.

The Modern Era Committee is going to have their hands full dealing with the aging of all those steroid era high performers who were never actually convicted of anything, but did look, talk, and behave in ways that made them seem to be awfully guilty, and, sometimes, by their own words, probably were guilty.

Of something.

Hopefully, when it comes to the steroid era suspects, time will also help baseball come to a reckoning which rises in discernment from something more than “keep ’em all out” to “let ’em all in,” but that’s another problem for another day.

Today it’s time for most of us to say: “Congratulations, Jack Morris and Alan Trammell! The Hall of Fame awaits your deserved and welcomed call!”

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

The Complete List of Houston MLB Managers

December 15, 2017

Yes, we know. Phil Garner’s # was 3 for most of his career, but what was it for the 74 games he managed the Astros late in 2004? Baseball America has him listed as “uk” for that partial first season as Houston’s manager.

 

Just in case it comes up again, here is the list of all managers in Houston MLB history, along with their records and uniform numbers. Please note that Harry Craft was not the last Houston manager to go with “1” as his identifying number choice, although “2” proved just as popular. Unless we miscounted, the numbers “1” and “2” both appear 8 times.

Also of interest is the fact that two short-term interim managers, Dave Clark (for 13 games in 2009) and Tony DeFrancesco (for 41 games in 2012) apparently managed in wrap-up seasons in which no one, including the managers themselves, was paying much attention to whatever the numbers were on their jerseys. Their numbers here are recorded as “uk” for “unknown.”

What we don’t get is – why weren’t they able to get Phil Garner’s # for the 74 games he managed the Astros in 2004 after taking over for Jimy Williams? Garner drew a “uk” for 2004, even though he very clearly wore # 3 for the other three seasons he managed the Astros (2005-07). A player probably already had uniform # 3 late in the 2004 year when Phil came in, but how hard could it have been to get the number from Garner as well as from the two others?

Sometimes it may just boil down to the question’s potential for embarrassment. If the person being asked takes it personally, they may be thinking something like: “Gee, if you don’t even recall my number, what else made me into a player or manager that left no impressions?”

Our consolation from this whole managerial number episode may be found in the following question: Is there anyone out there among Astros fans now who still doesn’t know that Astros manager A.J. Hinch wore # 14 on his way to leading the 2017 club to its first World Series victory?

BASEBALL AMERICA PRESENTS ~

Houston Colt .45s Managers

1962-1964

Managers & Finishes

Year Uniform # Manager Wins Losses WP Finish GB
1962 1

Harry Craft

64 96 .400 8th 36½
1963 1 55 95 .407 9th 33
1964 1 61 88 .409 9th 27
6

Lum Harris

5 8 .385
Houston Colt .45s Managers & Finishes

AND ….

Houston Astros Managers
1965 – 2018Managers & Finishes
Year Uniform # Manager(s) Wins Losses WP Finish GB Roster
1965 26

Lum Harris

65 97 .401 9th 32

1965

1966 1

Grady Hatton

72 90 .444 8th 23

1966

1967 1

Grady Hatton

69 93 .426 9th 32½

1967

1968 1

Grady Hatton

23 38 .377 10th 25

1968

25

Harry Walker

49 52 .485
1969 25

Harry Walker

81 81 .500 5th 12

1969

1970 25

Harry Walker

79 83 .488 4th 23

1970

1971 25

Harry Walker

79 83 .488 4th 11

1971

1972 25

Harry Walker

67 54 .554 2nd 10½

1972

1

Salty Parker

1 0 1.000
2

Leo Durocher

16 15 .516
1973 2

Leo Durocher

82 80 .506 4th 17

1973

1974 18

Preston Gomez

81 81 .500 4th 21

1974

1975 18

Preston Gomez

47 80 .370 6th 43½

1975

7

Bill Virdon

17 17 .500
1976 7

Bill Virdon

80 82 .494 3rd 22

1976

1977 7

Bill Virdon

81 81 .500 3rd 17

1977

1978 7

Bill Virdon

74 88 .457 5th 21

1978

1979 7

Bill Virdon

89 73 .549 2nd

1979

1980 7

Bill Virdon

93 70 .571 1st +1

1980

1981 7

Bill Virdon

61 49 .555 3rd / 1st 6

1981

1982 7

Bill Virdon

49 62 .441 5th 12

1982

5

Bob Lillis

28 23 .549
1983 5

Bob Lillis

85 77 .525 3rd 6

1983

1984 5

Bob Lillis

80 82 .494 2nd 12

1984

1985 5

Bob Lillis

83 79 .512 3rd 12

1985

1986 22

Hal Lanier

96 66 .593 1st +10

1986

1987 22

Hal Lanier

76 86 .469 3rd 14

1987

1988 22

Hal Lanier

82 80 .506 5th 12½

1988

1989 18

Art Howe

86 76 .531 3rd 6

1989

1990 18

Art Howe

75 87 .463 4th 16

1990

1991 18

Art Howe

65 97 .401 6th 29

1991

1992 18

Art Howe

81 81 .500 4th 17

1992

1993 18

Art Howe

85 77 .525 3rd 19

1993

1994 2

Terry Collins

66 49 .574 2nd ½

1994

1995 2

Terry Collins

76 68 .528 2nd 9

1995

1996 2

Terry Collins

82 80 .506 2nd 6

1996

1997 49

Larry Dierker

84 78 .519 1st +5

1997

1998 49

Larry Dierker

102 60 .630 1st +12½

1998

1999 49

Larry Dierker

97 65 .599 1st +1½

1999

2000 49

Larry Dierker

72 90 .444 4th 23

2000

2001 49

Larry Dierker

93 69 .574 1st +5

2001

2002 22

Jimy Williams

84 78 .519 2nd 13

2002

2003 22

Jimy Williams

87 75 .537 2nd 1

2003

2004 22

Jimy Williams

44 44 .500 2nd 13

2004

uk

Phil Garner

48 26 .649
2005 3

Phil Garner

89 73 .549 2nd 11

2005

2006

3

Phil Garner

82

80

.506

2nd

2006

2007 3

Phil Garner

58 73 .443 4th 12 2007

15

Cecil Cooper

15 16 .484

2008

15

Cecil Cooper

86

75

.534

3rd

11

2008

2009 15 Cecil Cooper 70 79 .470 5th 17 2009
uk Dave Clark 4 9 .308
2010 2 Brad Mills 76 86 .469 4th 15 2010
2011 2 Brad Mills 56 106 .346 6th 40 2011
2012 2 Brad Mills 39 82 .322 6th 42 2012
uk Tony DeFrancesco 16 25 .390
2013 16 Bo Porter 51 111 .315 5th 45 2013
2014 16 Bo Porter 59 79 .428

4th

28

2014

1

Tom Lawless (1)

11

13

.458

2015 14 A.J. Hinch 86 76 .531 2nd 2 2015
2016 14 A.J. Hinch 84 78 .519 3rd 11 2016
2017 14 A.J. Hinch 101 61 .623 1st +21 2017
2018 14 A.J. Hinch 2018
Year Uniform # Manager(s) Wins Losses WP Finish GB Roster
Houston Astros Managers & Finishes | (1) = Interim Manager

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle